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Mobile Solution for RAID 0 FireWire 800 Hard Disk
Turns out LaCie makes an excellent portable FireWire bus-powered 7200 rpm hard disk which implements a RAID 0 solution. The LaCie Little Big Disk Quadra does it all. This, my friends, is the ultimate drive for running a VM from an external drive to a MacBook Pro. It’s 7200 rpm, RAID 0, FireWire 800 and has 400 GB of total storage space. Perfect.
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About that MacBook Pro 200 GB 7200 rpm Hard Disk
I’ve been working with this new MacBook Pro for about 2 months now. I ordered the latest hardware refresh the day that it was released. I’m very happy with it. This new model replaced a 2-year old model which was also the “ultimate” configuration when it was out. One of the things I noticed about the new MacBook was the much faster hard disk. You can really notice the difference when you move to 7200 rpm from 5400 rpm.
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Stunning Hard Disk Performance of LaCie BigDisk Extreme+
I as you can see from an earlier post, I am working on finding the best home for my VMware guest disk file on my MacBook Pro. The LaCie BigDisk Extreme+ is looking like the best choice among hard disks but I wanted to know how the LaCie compares to the internal MacBook Pro drive. I have the latest “ultimate” configuration which includes the 7200 rpm 200 GB drive.
This time around, I decided to use the industry-standard Mac benchmarking program XBench.
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A Few Other Mac Utilities
I remembered a couple of other Mac programs I use pretty regularly. Add these to my other list of Mac software:
XBench. This is the standard Mac benchmarking program. It’s freeware and it rocks. It will benchmark your Mac’s CPU, memory, graphics card, and disks.
Remote Desktop. The only Microsoft offering I use on the Mac, RD is essential if you need to remote into a Windows machine somewhere. This is great if you are a Window developer (at least some of the time) and need to get into your servers and don’t want to boot up the Windows VM or reboot into Boot Camp.
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FireWire 400/800 vs. USB 2.0 for Virtual Machine Use
I recently decided to switch to VMware on my Mac for hosting my Windows installation. I started off with the VM disk image on my MacBook hard disk. I have a MacBook Pro with a 7200 rpm 200 GB hard disk. The performance of the VM was not ideal. Obviously there is disk contention between Mac OS and VWware. But I hesitated to move the file over to an external drive because I didn’t feel an external disk would perform any better.
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The Mac Software I Use All the Time
I am an enterprise application architect. My daily professional work consists of creating architectural documents and writing code in C# using the .NET Framework. But I do all of this on a MacBook Pro using a Parallels virtual machine or, in now rare occasions, the Boot Camp instance. I run Windows Vista Ultimate in the VM. But I only work in Windows when I have to. Even my documentation work is all done on the Mac side now.
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Doings
I posted an article on CharlesSieg.com about my wife’s new Mac Pro.
Currently enjoying the 2005 J. Lohr Cabernet Sauvignon.
Loving the new WordPress blogging platform.
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Mac Pro: The Ultimate Vista Machine
I find it ironic in the extreme that probably the best Windows computer in the world is Apple’s Mac Pro workstation. For $2,799 base, you get (2) Intel 64-bit Xeon CPUs, each with 4 cores, 8 memory slots expandable to 32 GB total memory with 2 GB installed, and a bunch of other stuff.
We bought one for Ahu to use at home to help speed along her dissertation experiments. Ahu works with massive XML files and those files, when read in, take up lots of memory.
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Household Core Count
I was talking to Primeaux today and was curious about how many CPU cores he has running in his household. I believe he counted to 20. Now, that’s not surprising, considering he’s a parallel and distributed kind of guy. My own count, though, isn’t far off. 2 cores for my MacBook Pro and 2 core for Ahu’s MacBook Pro. 8 cores for the new Mac Pro. 2 more cores for the iMac in the kitchen.
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A New Home on WordPress
CharlesSieg.com has finally taken the plunge and moved on to a “modern” blogging platform. Prior to today, the website was hosted in Narrative, a blogging platform designed, written, and supported by me. That is, until the last year has been so busy that there hasn’t been any support. So, hence, the move to WordPress, the #1 blogging platform in the world. I’m already enjoying the great post editing support and the many beautiful themes.